
3 minute read
What Makes Ronnie Roll Fellowship, Fun, And A Few Facts
by Ali Elizabeth Turner
When we met, I had been home from the Asbury Revival in Kentucky for a week, and I had the chance to tell Mayor Ronnie about what an amazing experience it had been. It especially pleased him that the Asbury administration had put such an emphasis on honoring the students, from having them do the lion’s share of the ministry to protecting their stories and testimonies by giving guidelines with regard to filming and posting. We both marveled at what had happened there, and as it applies to our own youth, once again Jerome Malone is overseeing the Mayor’s
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Youth Commission as they produce a podcast at the Athens-Limestone Public Library. We also talked about how impossible it seemed that graduation is just around the corner, and how time has seemed to speed up all the way around.
With regard to the upcoming State of the City breakfast and address which will be held on March 7 at Athens State University, Mayor Ronnie said tongue-incheek, “We are going to have fellowship, fun, and a few facts.” I retorted with a smile, “Only a few?” He knew that a ton of pie charts, spread sheets, and graphs were not going to be what would truly meet the needs of Athenians who would attend, and while the standard topics that make any city great would be addressed, i.e., growth, public safety, and quality of life being the most important, he wanted this year’s address to be slightly more light-hearted. “Thank God we get to serve, live, work, worship, and play here in Athens, Alabama,” he said.
We moved on to the topic of roads. “We have been in contact with Alabama Department of Transportation (ALDOT) to find funding streams to make Line Road safer,” he said. Line Road is on Highway 72 near 306
BBQ and the Christmas tree farm, and turning on to it either direction is riskier than it should be.
“Another road that needs attention is Cambridge Lane, and crossing it to turn west on Highway 72 is super dangerous,” said the mayor. He then added, “We’ll be upgrading parking lots, too.”
People are always asking Mayor Ronnie about retail projects, and he has had to say to me on several occasions, “I can’t comment on that, yet.”
However, what is amusing is when people come to him and are dogmatic that a certain big-box retail store or stores are going to be built in various areas, and he says to himself, “Hmmm, how come no one told me?” It is true that we are growing “fast and furious,” but several of the “proposed projects” have, in fact, never been proposed at all and their ground-breaking ceremonies are not at all in the offing.
We talked again about Asbury, how it was just as miraculous that the town of Wilmore, KY, whose population is about 6,000 was able to handle swelling to the size of about 50,000 and handle it so well. And then we prayed, as we always do, and then it was time for Ronnie to roll.


I’m watching with increasing discomfort as the Biden Administration fumbles its way through foreign and military policy as if there’s no plan. What is the intended end state? What is their analysis?
Those who have experience with leadership know the old adage that, “A failure to plan is a plan to fail.” There will always be those times when leaders have to adapt, or pivot to new opportunities, or seize momentum. But whenever possible, a leader must have a plan. In the private sector, a new business should have a full SWOT analysis to examine the business case in light of strengths, weaknesses, obstacles and threats.
When attorneys go to court, they should have a litigation plan with a desired end state in mind that comes from having researched a position under the law before ever appearing before the Judge. Every young Army officer is taught to write and disseminate a five paragraph Operations Order that clearly outlines the mission, the enemy situation, the commander’s intent. A plan that specifies subunit tasks, command and signal, and key timelines.
True planning provides an orderly and cogent means of helping to guide the leaders’ thoughts with the ultimate purpose clearly in mind. In the absence of a plan missions can go awry. What we are watching right now with the U.S. involvement in the war in Ukraine is a form of international hopscotch that comes from having no coherent strategy.